The Wall Street Journal - 28.03.2020 - 29.03.2020

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Saturday/Sunday, March 28 - 29, 2020 |C9


POLITICS
BYBARTON
SWAIM

GEORGE FRIEDMAN’Slatest
book is either a work of
balderdash or a prescient
anticipation of our current woe,
or bits of both. In“The Storm
Before the Calm” (Doubleday,
238 pages, $28.95),Mr.
Friedman, specialist in
geopolitical forecasting, posits
two kinds of “cycle” in American
history: an institutional one,
which lasts roughly 80 years;
and a socioeconomic one,
which lasts roughly 50.
The institutional cycles
involve the relationship between
the federal government and the
states. From 1787 until the Civil
War, Mr. Friedman tells us, the
relationship remained ambiguous;
from the Civil War to 1945, the
federal government assumed
pre-eminence; from 1945 to
now, Washington expanded its
authority over nearly every
area of American life.
The socioeconomic cycles,
meanwhile, have mainly had to
do with the dominant forces in
the commercial sector: private
banking from 1787 to the
presidency of Andrew Jackson;
land expansion from Jackson
to the end of Ulysses Grant’s
second term; production-focused
industry from about 1880 to
the crash of 1929; technocratic
management from FDR to
Reagan; and an investment-
centered system based on low
taxes and low interest rates
from Reagan to the present.
Each iteration of these
cycles—in both categories—has
ended in crisis, Mr. Friedman

says, but in each case America
has reinvented itself and
established another period of
stability and prosperity.
“The Storm Before the Calm”
is not a work of history but of
augury. The big idea: Both the
institutional cycle and the socio-
economic one will, for the first
time, end simultaneously. This
will happen, he believes, in the
2020s. Mr. Friedman predicts
economic and political upheaval
over the next decade, then a new
stability in the 2030s and beyond.
Like other works of prognosti-
cation, this one depends heavily
on a forced reading of history,
often expressed in oracular
truisms. Are we really to believe
that the second “socioeconomic
cycle” ran right through the Civil
War and its immediate aftermath
despite the fact that roughly a
third of the economy, namely the
South, was utterly destroyed
more than a decadebeforeit
ended? Then there are the banal-
ities: “Where the United States
emerges at the end of the decade
will in large part depend on how
these crisis points are handled by
both the voters and the leaders
of the nation.” Ah.
If you take away Mr. Fried-
man’s dodgy idea of recurrent
50- and 80-year cycles, and
ignore the ever more speculative
prophecies near the end, the
book contains real insights.
One example: The two problems
now bringing us to a political
crisis, he contends, are “diffu-
sion” and “entanglement”: i.e.,
the “diffusion and fragmentation

of knowledge among individual
“experts” and “multiple federal
agencies engaged in managing
parts of the same problem.”
That sounds to me a lot like
the federal government’s helter-
skelter response to the Covid-19
outbreak.
F.H. Buckley, too, thinks we
are barreling toward a crisis,
but he sees a solution: breaking
apart. In“American Secession:
The Looming Threat of a
National Breakup” (Encounter,
170 pages, $23.99), Mr. Buckley,
a law professor at George Mason

University, asks us to set aside
secession’s associations with
the Civil War and consider the
virtues of an amicable breakup.
The likeliest split, in his view,
wouldn’t happen along the
Mason-Dixon. California has a
more robust secession movement
than the South does, and for
good reason: The Golden State
is as different from Georgia, say,
as Austria is from Germany or
the U.S. from Canada. Energetic
independence movements,
he notes, appear all over the
developed world—Flanders,

Scotland, Quebec, Catalonia.
The advantages, or perceived
advantages, include greater
cultural cohesion (good for the
right) and fewer temptations to
imperialism (good for the left).
Mr. Buckley addresses a
number of constitutional and
philosophical objections to the
idea of breakup, but I remain
unconvinced that our present
animosities match those of 1861.
Is the hatred we see in Wash-
ington and on social media
sufficiently real for secession?
“From prominent Democrats,” he
writes in an atypically hyperbolic
sentence, “there are daily calls
for resistance in the streets,
and our restaurants and theaters
have turned into no-go-zones for
people of the wrong political
party.” But “calls” for resistance
in the streets are very different
from resistance in the streets.
Ross Douthat suggests that
a decadent society like ours has
ways of keeping its members,
however rebellious they may
pretend to be, more or less
submissive. The great invention
of our time—the internet—
shames would-be rebels into
docility, routes male sexual
aggression into nonviolent fan-
tasy, and turns actual savagery
into performative outrage.
“Some of our most polarized
factions,” he writes in“The
Decadent Society” (Avid
Reader, 258 pages, $27),“are
distinguished by their extremely
comfortable late-modern lives.”
By “decadent” Mr. Douthat,
a New York Times columnist,

doesn’t mean depraved or
morally suspect. Decadence,
for him, describes “a situation
in which repetition is more the
norm than innovation; in which
sclerosis afflicts public institu-
tions and private enterprises
alike; in which intellectual life
seems to go in circles.” In reli-
gion, the arts and technology,
Mr. Douthat argues, we are
simply too prosperous and
secure to come up with any-
thing genuinely new.
“The Decadent Society”
engages with a dizzying array
of ideas and works. Among my
favorite passages are those
in which Mr. Douthat revives
Francis Fukuyama’s “The End
of History and the Last Man”
(1992), a book so often dismissed
by people who haven’t read it
that its author deserves, if only
there were such a thing, a
national apology. Mr. Fukuyama,
never the liberal triumphalist
his critics claimed, foresaw the
boredom and stasis into which
Western liberal democracies
have fallen. If Mr. Friedman has
a cyclical view of history, and
Mr. Buckley a fractured one, Mr.
Douthat, following Mr. Fukuyama,
takes a linear view. Linear sounds
purposeful and exciting, but we
find ourselves at the end of the
line with nowhere to go: affluent,
basically unthreatened but also
tired and unhappy and relying
on stupid entertainments and
perverted thrills just to stay
awake. Perhaps we need a
crisis—a real one—to get
our juices flowing again.

Crises, Real and Imagined


THIS WEEK


The Storm Before
the Calm
By George Friedman

American Secession
By F.H. Buckley

The Decadent Society
By Ross Douthat

Will


economic


and
political
upheaval
drive us
apart,
or is
stability
and
common
purpose
still

possible?


BYDANIELJ.LEVITIN


I


F YOU’RE OVERabout 20 and learned
about evolution in your high-school
biology class, it’s likely that there were
a number of things that didn’t seem to
add up, and that you were exhorted to
just take on faith. Random mutations occur,
and across millions of births, the story goes,
every once in a while an individual ends up
with a mutation that confers a benefit for
reproduction, or at least for living long enough
to reproduce. The classic example is white-
bodied moths (Biston betularia) on the trunk
of a tree with white bark—they blend in and
so are more difficult for predators to pick off.
After the industrial revolution in the U.K.
turned many of the white-barked trees black
with soot, some moths that had randomly
become black were better camouflaged; soon
they were the only ones left to reproduce, and
all U.K. moths became black-bodied.
As science, evolution is not like a chemistry
experiment, where you can mix baking soda
and vinegar and see an instant reaction, or a
physics experiment where you slam one pool
ball into another. Like relativity theory,
evolution can only really be understood
through thought experiments. But those don’t
work so well for larger-scale changes. Why
don’t we see more “intermediate” species,
such as fish with legs or short-necked giraffes?
How could anything as complicated as eyes
have developed through evolution? They are
an intricate mechanism that requires a lot of
different parts working harmoniously together,
and in isolation the development of only a few
of these parts would be pointless. Many a high-
school and college student is left to throw
questions like this onto the pile with other
unanswerables, such as what there was before
the universe formed, or whether cannibals
avoid eating clowns because they taste funny.
In “Some Assembly Required,” as well as
his previous popular-science masterpiece
“Your Inner Fish,” the biologist Neil Shubin
shows himself to be a natural storyteller and a
gifted scientific communicator. This new work
catches us up on the latest progress in
understanding such complicated cases—and
there has been a lot of it, some providing the
kind of hard, tangible evidence that many
scientists once thought would be impossible
to find without a time machine. But a time
machine is effectively what Mr. Shubin and his
colleagues at the University of Chicago and
elsewhere have found by studying fossils, and
by studying the natural variation that occurs
in contemporary species such as salamanders.
The author points out the very logical
notion that not every mutation is equally as
likely to occur. There are constraints—in the
structure and materials of bones, cartilage and
joints, for example. Consider flight—many
creatures fly, but the feat takes similar form
across bats, “flying” squirrels, birds and insects
because flight requires a great surface area in
order to bring the organism aloft. Yet wings
are made out of a variety of things—webbing
between fingers and toes, feathers and the


translucent polysaccharide of insect wings.
Animals that fly arrive at wings independently,
but once they do, the physics of the matter
dictates that wings will share a similar form.
What about that missing link, the short-
necked giraffe? Mr. Shubin describes
something even more spectacular: independent
evolution of radically different forms of an
organism that have been geographically
separated. Various Caribbean islands have

similar lizards on them. Forest lizards come in
three types, with specialized adaptations for
living in the canopy of a tree, on the trunk or
near the ground. You might expect that the
canopy-living lizards, with their big, deep green
heads (the color of foliage), would be most
closely related to other canopy-living lizards
across the islands. But they’re not. Rather, the
lizards on each island “are most closely related
to others on their own island.” What began as
a single type of lizard on a given island
became, over time, three types—on each island,
they adapted independently, with evolution
producing the same result over and over again.
Something similar took place with mam-
mals. Marsupials—those pouch mammals that
include the kangaroo, wallaby, koala and, here,

the Virginia opossum—include diverse species
that mimic the forms of nonmarsupial
mammals, another instance of evolution
independently coming up with the same result.
“There is a marsupial flying squirrel, a
marsupial mole, a marsupial ground cat and
even a marsupial groundhog. And those are
just the ones that are alive today—marsupial
lions, wolves, and even saber-toothed cats”
once roamed Australia.
These findings show us that the diversity of
life as we know it is not the one-in-a-million
shot of contingencies being just so. The forms
that organisms take are constrained by the
ways “genes and development build bodies,
by the physical constraints of environments.”
There is a certain poetry to Mr. Shubin’s
account, as when he explains that “the genetic
architecture that builds the bodies of flies,
mice, and people reveals that we are all
variations on a theme. From a common toolkit
come the many branches of the tree of life.”
You might say it’s in-gene-ious.
With so much in the news about
coronavirus, we could all do with a better
understanding of what viruses are and how
they work. Mr. Shubin provides: “Viruses...
have genomes stripped of everything but the
machinery needed for infection and
reproduction. They invade cells, enter the
nucleus, and invade the genome itself. Once in
the DNA, they take over and use the host’s
genome to make copies of themselves...with
this infection, a single host cell becomes a
factory to make millions of viruses.” Viruses
are not “designed” to be destructive; indeed,

if they are too infectious, the host will die and
so will the viruses. And of course, not all
viruses are bad; some are beneficial. So here’s
where the story gets really wild.
Scientists discovered a gene called Arc
(Activity-regulated cytoskeleton-associated
protein) that is activated every time you learn
something; flaws in this gene have since been
implicated in amnesia and Alzheimer’s disease.
All land-living animals have the Arc gene, due
to a virus (a relative of HIV, by the way) that
invaded the genome of our common ancestor,
about 375 million years ago. Once the virus
entered a host, it brought with it the ability to
make a protein that enhanced neuroplasticity
and memories. Traits can appear in one species,
only to be borrowed, stolen and modified by
another through viral infections. “Our ability to
read, write, and remember the moments of our
lives,” Mr. Shubin writes, “is due to an ancient
viral infection that happened when fish took
their first steps on land.” Viral infection, and
later domestication of the virus, is now under-
stood to be a source of these “independent
inventions,” such as the weird coincidence that
written language appeared more or less
simultaneously all around the globe. If you’re
reading this while sheltering in place during the
coronavirus pandemic, thank a different, benev-
olent virus for giving you the ability to read.
And to remember that favorite song you want
to play next time you’re feeling down.

Mr. Levitin’s latest book is “Successful Aging:
A Neuroscientist Explores the Power and
Potential of Our Lives.”

Some Assembly Required


By Neil Shubin


Pantheon, 267 pages, $26.95


How Nature Finds a Way


ONLY WAY TO FLYAnimals that fly evolved wings independently, but due to the physics of matter wings always share a similar form.


PASCAL GOETGHELUCK/SCIENCE SOURCE

BOOKS


‘Imagine a house coming together spontaneously from all the information contained in the bricks: that is how animal bodies are made.’—NEIL SHUBIN


Did a virus help humans
develop the ability to read,
write and remember?
Free download pdf